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Venue City/Town Tenant/Use Capacity Miscellaneous Charlotte Motor Speedway: Concord: Oval racing, Road racing: 94,000-170,000 [1]: North Wilkesboro Speedway: North Wilkesboro
Memorial Stadium: 90,000 Lincoln: Nebraska: Nebraska Cornhuskers [12] [13] Ben Hill Griffin Stadium: 88,548 Gainesville: Florida: Florida Gators [14] Jordan-Hare Stadium: 88,043 Auburn: Alabama: Auburn Tigers [15] MetLife Stadium: 82,500 East Rutherford: New Jersey: New York Giants and New York Jets: Frank Howard Field at Clemson Memorial ...
Grayson Stadium [f] Savannah Senators/Indians, Savannah Braves: Savannah: Georgia: 1927 7,914 [21] Greenville Municipal Stadium: Greenville Braves: Greenville: South Carolina: 1984 [22] 7,027 [23] Hank Aaron Stadium: Mobile BayBears: Mobile: Alabama: 1997 6,000 [24] Hartwell Field Mobile Athletics/White Sox: Mobile: Alabama: 1927 [25] 8,000 [26 ...
The newest stadium is Fifth Third Park in Spartanburg, South Carolina, which will be the home of the Hub City Spartanburgers beginning in 2025. One stadium was built in each of the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s, two in the 1950s, one in the 1980s, six in the 1990s, 14 in the 2000s, and two in each of the 2010s and 2020s.
In 1991, $1.6 million in renovations and repairs were accomplished on the stadium. [3] Ronald and Mary Ellen Dowdy of Orlando, Florida, donated $1 million during a fund-raising drive in 1994. Because of this donation, Ficklen Memorial Stadium was renamed Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium. [2] Also that year the roads were improved around the stadium. [3]
Greenville County would own the $38.6 million stadium at BridgeWay Station, and it would be "transformative" for the Upstate, says Mauldin mayor. Joe Erwin reveals full plans for $39M county-owned ...
Greenville's professional men's soccer club and pre-professional women's club will finally have a field to call home, beginning in 2026 Greenville Triumph has found a home: Club announces 10,000 ...
It replaced Greenville's outdated and under-repaired Greenville Memorial Auditorium—located across the street from the new arena—imploded on September 20, 1997. [4] The arena naming rights were purchased by Dutch grocer Ahold, then-owner of BI-LO, which had been founded in nearby Mauldin and was still based there at the time.